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Name | Bill Baxley |
---|---|
Caption | (Photo courtesy Alabama Department of Archives and History) |
Birth date | June 27, 1941 |
Birth place | Dothan, Houston County, Alabama, U.S. |
Residence | Birmingham, Alabama |
Office | 24th Lieutenant Governor of Alabama |
Term start | 1983 |
Term end | 1987 |
Predecessor | George McMillan |
Successor | Jim Folsom, Jr. (D) |
Office2 | 41st Attorney General of Alabama |
Term start2 | 1971 |
Term end2 | 1979 |
Predecessor2 | MacDonald Gallion |
Successor2 | Charles Graddick |
Office3 | District Attorney Houston County |
Term start3 | 1969 |
Term end3 | 1971 |
Party | Democratic |
Religion | United Methodist |
Spouse | Marie Baxley |
Children | 5 |
Baxley's tenure was noted for its racial unrest, and Baxley himself incurred the wrath of the Ku Klux Klan when he reopened the case of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing. In a letter, the Klan threatened him, compared him to JFK, and made him an "honorary nigger", but Baxley responded, on official state letterhead: "My response to your letter of February 19, 1976, is--kiss my ass."
'' "We know who did it," Alabama Atty. Baxley said Wednesday as he confirmed that he has reopened the investigation of a church bombing that killed four young black girls in Birmingham in 1963. Baxley said in an interview with Birmingham radio station that the list of suspects had been narrowed down, but he declined to predict if or when arrests would be made. He said premature published reports about the investigation might have hurt. "There are some people in Jefferson County who ought to be pretty nervous right now," Baxley said in an earlier telephone interview.
The Sunday, Sept. 15, 1963, dynamite blast at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church occurred during the time of racial demonstrations led by the late Martin Luther King. Twenty-three other people in the church were hurt and debris was scattered for blocks.Baxley later confirmed that he had talked to Rowe, and he was cooperative, "But we were working on this thing long before that. We had a lot of stuff already. Rowe was just another person we interviewed."He said Rowe didn't give him a list of names as such, "but nine is too many."''Baxley succeeded in convicting Chambliss with minimal evidence (as the FBI refused to relinquish tapes necessary to the case). The victory eased the minds of the parents of Addie Mae Collins, Carole Robertson, Cynthia Wesley and Denise McNair.
Perennial candidate Hunt and questions of Democratic party loyalty both reappeared in another Baxley campaign eight years later. In 1986, the Democratic primary for the gubernatorial race saw Alabama Attorney General Charles Graddick in a runoff with Baxley, then the Lieutenant Governor. Graddick won by a few thousand votes, but Baxley appealed to the state Supreme Court, which ruled Graddick had violated primary regulations by encouraging Republicans to “cross over” and vote as Democrats. The court told the Democratic Party to hold another election or pick Baxley. The party picked Baxley.
Alabamians, used to a one-party state where the open-primary vote for the Democratic nomination was considered tantamount to election, were outraged and took out their frustrations by voting against Baxley and for H. Guy Hunt, the GOP nominee. Hunt won the election by a large margin, giving Alabama its first Republican governor since Reconstruction.
In 1979, Baxley founded the firm known today as Baxley, Dillard, Dauphin, McKnight & James. He primarily represents large business corporations, yet continues to represent individuals of modest means. Those efforts have earned him the distinction of being selected as a Fellow in the International Academy of Trial Lawyers.
Baxley played himself in the Spike Lee movie(documentary) Four Little Girls.
Category:1941 births Category:Living people Category:Alabama lawyers Category:Lieutenant Governors of Alabama Category:Alabama Attorneys General Category:People from Dothan, Alabama Category:Alabama Democrats
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